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Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 94

Mar 16, 2022

BIG designs virtual office in the metaverse for Vice

Posted by in categories: blockchains, innovation

Danish architecture studio BIG has designed its first building in the metaverse, a virtual office for employees at media company Vice Media Group called Viceverse.

The recently opened Viceverse office is located on the Decentraland platform, where it will serve as the agency’s virtual innovation lab and allow employees to work in the metaverse on Non Fungible Tokens (NFTs) and other digital projects.

Mar 15, 2022

Blue Origin NS-20: Launch date, passenger list, flight details for Pete Davidson trip

Posted by in categories: innovation, space travel

In the long term, Bezos hopes to develop the infrastructure that could enable humanity’s biggest goals in spaceflight — similar to how Amazon used innovations like the postal service to power its dreams decades later.

Bezos envisions giant orbiting cities, located close to Earth, that could enable humanity to expand to 1 trillion humans. The cities could feature leisure and recreation, or heavy industry that avoids polluting Earth nearby.

It could all start with flights like NS-20. Here’s what you need to know.

Mar 14, 2022

MIT Researchers Create Incredible Neural Implants From Fibers

Posted by in categories: innovation, neuroscience

Mar 13, 2022

Transmutation of radioactive waste

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Nobel Prize in physics in 2018 and professor emeritus at the École polytechnique, Gérard Mourou is a scientist that nothing can stop. After revolutionizing ophthalmic surgery with the invention of a new laser technique, the physicist launched a challenging scientific project, which only a researchers of this fame could imagine: the transmutation of radioactive waste by high-power laser. Andra met him to find out more.

It is on the plateau of Saclay, south of Paris, that we meet Gérard Mourou. Here at École Polytechnique, the Nobel Prize in Physics has been working in his laboratory for many years. His enthusiasm remains intact when it comes to addressing the issue of lasers. His research on the subject represents the project of a lifetime. “For a long time, the power of lasers was limited, due to the risk of destroying them. Alongside Donna Strickland, with whom I share the Nobel Prize, we invented the technique of CPA (Chirped Pulse Amplification): the laser emits an ultrashort pulse that we will stretch a colossal factor before amplifying it. Thanks to the CPA one can produce considerable power, to the order of the petawatt (10e15W), without destroying the laser. This represents the equivalent of a hundred times the world electricity grid, ” explains Gérard Mourou.

For the physicist, this new invention opens perspectives in several areas, starting with ophthalmic surgery. An application that came to light as a result of an unlikely combination of circumstances: One of my students was aligning the laser for an experiment when it got the pulse in the eye. We went to the hospital where an intern found that the damage to the retina was absolutely perfect. This laser was the cleanest knife possible…

Mar 11, 2022

Cool Inventions That Will Kill Your Boredom

Posted by in categories: innovation, neuroscience

BRAIN TIME ► https://goo.gl/tTWgH2

1. Parajet Xplorer Flying Car.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTuvhzGL2APrK4jZ2ARX3pw.

Continue reading “Cool Inventions That Will Kill Your Boredom” »

Mar 9, 2022

DNA Replication Speed Limit Could Be a Breakthrough for Stem Cell Therapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Adult cells in our body can only give rise to the same cell type. For example, a skin cell cannot give rise to a muscle cell but to skin cells only. This limits the potential use of adult cells for therapy. During early development, however, the cells in the embryo have the capacity to generate all cell types of our body, including stem cells. This capacity, which is called totipotency, has served as an inspiration for researchers to find new ways to recapitulate totipotency through cellular reprogramming in the lab.

Totipotent cells have their own speed

Totipotent cells have many properties, but we do not know all of them yet. Researchers at Helmholtz Munich have now made a new discovery: “We found out that in totipotent cells, the mother cells of stem cells, DNA replication occurs at a different pace compared to other more differentiated cells. It is much slower than in any other cell type we studied,” says Tsunetoshi Nakatani, first-author of the new study.

Mar 5, 2022

The relations between science, engineering and science fiction

Posted by in categories: engineering, innovation

A new video I uploaded to youtube about the relations between science fiction, science and technology.


Presentation given at the Imaginative Fiction Writers Association.

Continue reading “The relations between science, engineering and science fiction” »

Mar 3, 2022

This genius guy’s invention will make you invisible! 😱

Posted by in category: innovation

Mar 3, 2022

What Technological Innovation Will Have the Greatest Impact in the Next 15 Years?

Posted by in category: innovation

The facility near Oxford will be 70% to commercial scale and should be operational by 2025.

Mar 2, 2022

NASA to fund research into future technology concepts

Posted by in categories: futurism, innovation

NASA has announced its latest selections for the Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, which funds research into long-term concepts that may be feasible over the next 10 to 40 years.

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